News BlogEast Africa

European support for Amisom continues

Mogadishu seen from the Aconit, the French frigate on a mission to accompany an Amisom container ship (credit: French Navy / Aconit)

L’Union européenne a décidé de continuer à soutenir la force de paix de l’Union Africaine en Somalie (AMISOM) en versant pour la période février-juillet, 65 millions d’euros, provenant du budget communautaire. Le versement est effectué à l’Union africaine.

Cette décision intervient alors que l’Union africaine a décidé de porter les effectifs de la force de paix en Somalie de 8000 à 12.000 hommes essentiellement fournis par les Ougandais et les Burundais. Un troisième pays enverra des troupes : la Guinée. Et qu’un débat est entamé pour que l’AMISOM ait un mode plus offensif en Somalie. Des renforts en hélicoptères de combat ont également été demandés. Mais ainsi que l’a rappelé à la mi-janvier, lors d’une réunion à Djibouti, le représentant spécial de l’ONU pour la Somalie, Augustine Mahiga, le Fonds d’affectation spécial de l’ONU est “at its lowest“. Cette décision de l’Union européenne est donc la bienvenue.

Les 65 millions d’euros versés par l’Union européenne à son homologue africain sont destinés surtout à payer les allocations des soldats de la paix, les salaires du personnel civil, le transport et le soutien médical. Les armes ne sont en revanche pas financés, précise un expert de ce dossier. Précisons également que Eunavfor, la force navale anti-piraterie européenne, assure l’escorte de tous les navires de l’AMISOM vers Mogadiscio (et retour). Le coût de cet accompagnement n’est pas compris dans le montant indiqué.

Nicolas Gros Verheyde

Chief editor of the B2 site. Graduated in European law from the University of Paris I Pantheon Sorbonne and listener to the 65th session of the IHEDN (Institut des Hautes Etudes de la Défense Nationale. Journalist since 1989, founded B2 - Bruxelles2 in 2008. EU/NATO correspondent in Brussels for Sud-Ouest (previously West-France and France-Soir).

One thought on “European support for Amisom continues"

  • Al Somal

    AMISOM, 8000 strong, was designed to protect the GTN institutions, which were tasked with pursuing and completing the national reconciliation process.
    It is, however, common knowledge that this mission is doomed, irremediably, to failure.
    Tainted with congenital illegitimacy, due to the poor appreciation of the situation prevailing in Somalia by the international community, the GNT is perceived by the vast majority of Somalis as puppets as impotent as they are isolated from the rest of the national community. The government team and parliamentarians live in Mogadisho, on an area of ​​less than 10 km under the protection of AMISOM.
    A symbol of negligence, corruption, personal enrichment, guilty of having ceded part of the Somali seaboard to neighboring countries and of collusion with mercenary companies, the members of the GNT themselves do not believe in the future of the institutions they claim to represent.
    As for the AMISOM soldiers, unable to engage in infantry combat to dislodge the Al-Shabab fighters, they cowardly pound the high-density civilian neighborhoods and the popular markets of Mogadisho.
    The more civilian victims there are in these massacres, tolerated and authorized by the international community, the more the popularity of the Islamist insurgents skyrockets.
    Question to a European official: What is the good of continuing to support AMISOM?
    -Answer: It is to fight against Islamist terrorism.
    - But finally, Sir, I strive to explain to you that you are in the process of widening the popular base of Al-Shabab. You don't understand what I've been telling you for months.
    – Yes and no, but hey, I don't know how to answer you. Let's say, in short, that for the moment it's the status quo. We are waiting for the politicians to change their positions and for that they need a completely different reading of the Somali situation. However, I warn you that it will not be for tomorrow, you will have to arm yourself with a lot of patience.

Comments closed.